Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the contributors
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: constructing international health between the wars
- 2 ‘Custodians of the sacred fire’: the ICRC and the postwar reorganisation of the International Red Cross
- 3 Red Cross organisational politics, 1918–1922: relations of dominance and the influence of the United States
- 4 The League of Nations Health Organisation
- 5 Assistance and not mere relief: the Epidemic Commission of the League of Nations, 1920–1923
- 6 Wireless wars in the eastern arena: epidemiological surveillance, disease prevention and the work of the Eastern Bureau of the League of Nations Health Organisation, 1925–1942
- 7 Social medicine at the League of Nations Health Organisation and the International Labour Office compared
- 8 The Social Section and Advisory Committee on Social Questions of the League of Nations
- 9 ‘Uncramping child life’: international children's organisations, 1914–1939
- 10 The International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation: the Russell years, 1920–1934
- 11 The cycles of eradication: the Rockefeller Foundation and Latin American public health, 1918–1940
- 12 The Pasteur Institutes between the two world wars. The transformation of the international sanitary order
- 13 Internationalising nursing education during the interwar period
- 14 Mental hygiene as an international movement
- 15 Mobilising social knowledge for social welfare: intermediary institutions in the political systems of the United States and Great Britain between the First and Second World Wars
- Index
- Cambridge History of Medicine
5 - Assistance and not mere relief: the Epidemic Commission of the League of Nations, 1920–1923
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the contributors
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: constructing international health between the wars
- 2 ‘Custodians of the sacred fire’: the ICRC and the postwar reorganisation of the International Red Cross
- 3 Red Cross organisational politics, 1918–1922: relations of dominance and the influence of the United States
- 4 The League of Nations Health Organisation
- 5 Assistance and not mere relief: the Epidemic Commission of the League of Nations, 1920–1923
- 6 Wireless wars in the eastern arena: epidemiological surveillance, disease prevention and the work of the Eastern Bureau of the League of Nations Health Organisation, 1925–1942
- 7 Social medicine at the League of Nations Health Organisation and the International Labour Office compared
- 8 The Social Section and Advisory Committee on Social Questions of the League of Nations
- 9 ‘Uncramping child life’: international children's organisations, 1914–1939
- 10 The International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation: the Russell years, 1920–1934
- 11 The cycles of eradication: the Rockefeller Foundation and Latin American public health, 1918–1940
- 12 The Pasteur Institutes between the two world wars. The transformation of the international sanitary order
- 13 Internationalising nursing education during the interwar period
- 14 Mental hygiene as an international movement
- 15 Mobilising social knowledge for social welfare: intermediary institutions in the political systems of the United States and Great Britain between the First and Second World Wars
- Index
- Cambridge History of Medicine
Summary
It is a curious and heartening fact that international cooperation in the prevention of epidemics placidly continues, however hostile or competitive other relationships may become.
(Hans Zinsser, Rats, Lice and History (1935), p. 293)The Epidemic Commission of the League of Nations (LNEC) was considered at the time of its creation to be the ‘first essay in international cooperation’, in that, contrary to other health and relief organisations, its funds proceeded not from a charitable public, but from national governments. The Commission acted exclusively through local health administrations, basing its work on ‘the necessity of strengthening the public health and sanitary organisation of the country as the most effective and the most lasting means of checking the spread of epidemics’. Although the Epidemic Commission lasted little over three years (April 1920–December 1923) and worked in only five countries (Poland, Soviet Russia and Ukraine, Latvia and Greece), it marks one of the early ‘success stories’ of the League of Nations Health Organisation (LNHO) which it preceded and, indirectly, had a large part in creating.
Typhus and the First World War
The Epidemic Commission (initially called the Typhus Commission) was born to fight the louse, as the vector of typhus, a rickettsial infectious fever which leads ‘the quiet bourgeois existence of a reasonably domesticated disease’ in times of peace and flares up into epidemics when basic sanitary conditions break down.
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- Information
- International Health Organisations and Movements, 1918–1939 , pp. 81 - 108Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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